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Once young readers get to
know the characters in certain books, they are likely to come back to those
characters and their adventures again and again – and so, series for readers in
the 6-10 age range can be very popular. Lenore Look and LeUyen Pham are
certainly on to something with their Alvin
Ho books, in which the always-frightened protagonist has previously
confronted school, birthday parties, camping and other everyday events that
have been almost overwhelming for him – but not quite. And of course Alvin has
learned, again and again, that things are not really as scary as he thought
they would be. In the latest book, though, something really scary is going on: Alvin’s mom is pregnant, which is
upsetting enough, and there is a 50-50 chance that the baby will be a girl, which compounds Alvin’s worries.
In fact, it compounds them to such a degree that he develops a sympathetic
pregnancy, which is just one complication here – and one that Alvin hopes will
take care of things when it turns out, inevitably, that his new sibling is a girl. (“The problem with girls, as
everyone knows, is that they’re not boys.”) In between the pregnancy discovery
at the start and the baby’s birth at the end, Alvin goes through a typical-for-him
set of issues. For example, his PDK, Personal Disaster Kit, “which was filled
with all sorts of emergency equipment like floss, a bandana, a mirror, a scary
mask, [and] disaster plans and escape routes to help me survive school,” gets
turned into a Personal Donations Kit for victims of the earthquake in Haiti.
And Alvin is as acronymic as usual, with comments on the WICCC (World Ice Cream
Cone Challenge) and being TFOIC (Too Full of Ice Cream) and so on. There is
also hockey here, and snow, and Alvin’s brave determination to prevent a thief
from getting to his mom’s “birthing nest,” and there are plenty of
misunderstandings and amusements and typical Alvin worries about nothing-at-all
(or not much, anyway). This fifth Alvin book will certainly please fans of the
first four.

And the ninth book about
Calvin Coconut will be fine for those who liked the first eight. Graham
Salisbury and Jacqueline Rogers use their latest tale of Calvin and friends to
poke gentle fun at the current fascination with zombie movies: one of the kids’
buddies, the strange and not-always-truthful but always interesting Benny Obi,
invites them to be extras in his uncle’s latest movie, Zombie Zumba. His uncle has previously made The People They Ate and My
Cousin Is a Teenage Vambie. (That is not a misprint: it is a cross between
a zombie and a vampire, which means, as Calvin explains, “Suck the blood, then
eat the brain. Cool.”) Tryouts go well, not only for Calvin but also for
Stella, the high-school girl who lives with Calvin and his mom, and soon Stella
is helping Calvin by “calling up my inner zombie” so Calvin – who has never
seen a zombie movie – can understand how to shamble. Soon the kids are getting
further zombie instructions from local policemen, and eventually even Calvin’s
little sister, Darci, gets into the act. And Calvin says that “if I live to be
a thousand years old I don’t think anything will ever be as fun and exciting
and weird and awesome as that one long day and night on the beach.” Calvin’s
personality, fully formed by this point in the series, shines through all the
activity, and the Hawaiian settings, which are also integral to the books, fit
right in as well. Extra Famous is thin in plot, more so than some other Calvin
Coconut books, but is as gently amusing and goodhearted as all the books are.
Calvin’s fans will look forward to the series’ next entry.

There will be no next entry
in the Zigzag Kids sequence by
Patricia Reilly Giff and Alasdair Bright: the eighth book is the last. But the
books will surely be around for a while: each is self-contained, and the
perfectly racially, ethnically and gender-balanced kids will entertain new
readers after their current fans have moved on. Each book focuses on one of the
kids in particular, and in Zigzag Zoom
it is Gina, a not-very-fast runner who is worried about taking part in a big
race between the Zigzag Zebras and the Timpanzi Tigers because she does not
want to let her group down. Gina’s problem is that one of the other kids, her
friend Beebe, sees Gina running to help someone and declares that Gina is a
super-fast runner and that everyone can count on her. But that only worries
Gina. “She didn’t want to be counted on. She was slow as a turtle.” Gina would
rather sing than run, and finds out from the music teacher, Mr. Sarsaparilla,
that “a peppy song makes you feel peppy,” so she pumps herself up even though
she knows she is simply not a speedy runner. It turns out not to matter: “She
still ran like a turtle. But she was a fast turtle.” And the race is a very low-key
one anyway, so everyone gets blue ribbons and gets to go to a party afterwards –
a fitting end to a series that is so good-natured as to be thoroughly
unbelievable but that, for that very reason, will be enjoyable for young
readers and for families trying to help kids deal with the
not-always-good-natured elements of school and after-school activities.